Q2 Holdings Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Back-half bookings drove subscription growth, margin expansion, and a platform-first AI/fraud narrative
Summary
Q2 closed 2025 with a powerful back-half run: record-level bookings pushed subscription ARR higher, adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow materially improved, and management laid out an explicit path to higher long-term margins. The company reported Q4 revenue of $208.2 million (up 14% YoY), full-year revenue of $794.8 million (up 14%), subscription ARR of $780 million (up 14%), and record full-year adjusted EBITDA of $186.5 million (up 49%). Q2 finished the year with $2.7 billion of backlog and a 93% free cash flow conversion, and execs used the call to raise 2026 subscription guidance and to publish 2027 and 2030 financial targets.
Beyond the headline numbers, management doubled down on a clear strategic thesis: a single-platform digital banking position that drives land-and-expand motion, scaled commercial payments, and a growing fraud product franchise that benefits from platform-level data and Innovation Studio partnerships. Cloud migration completion, tighter cost discipline, and early internal AI efficiencies underpin the margin targets, while non-subscription services are expected to decline modestly. Q2 is selling the story that AI and fraud will flow through the platform, not around it, and it set concrete 2026–2030 targets to prove the claim.
Key Takeaways
- Q4 revenue $208.2M, +14% YoY; full-year revenue $794.8M, +14%.
- Subscription revenue grew 16% YoY in Q4 and 17% for full-year 2025; subscription revenue represented 82% of total revenue for the year.
- Subscription ARR ended at $780M, up 14% YoY; total ARR $921M, up 12% YoY.
- Ending backlog $2.7B, up 21% YoY; Q4 was the company’s second-largest bookings quarter and followed a record Q3.
- Adjusted EBITDA Q4 $51.2M (+36% YoY); full-year adjusted EBITDA $186.5M (+49% YoY) with margin expansion of roughly 550 bps over the three-year framework.
- Free cash flow $173M for 2025, representing a 93% conversion of adjusted EBITDA; cash balance $433M after retiring $191M of convertible notes.
- Management raised 2026 subscription revenue growth target to at least 14% and guided full-year 2026 revenue $871M–$878M (~10% growth) and adjusted EBITDA $225M–$230M (~26% margin).
- Company published initial 2027 expectations (subscription growth 12.5%–13%; adj. EBITDA margin +150–200 bps) and longer-term 2030 targets: non-GAAP gross margins >=65% and adjusted EBITDA margins >=35%.
- Cloud migration completed in January 2026; management expects data-center cost roll-off and gross margin north of 60% in 2026 with further cloud-driven margin opportunity thereafter.
- Risk and fraud products were among the fastest-growing lines in 2025, including the largest fraud deal in company history with a $200B bank; fraud often sells faster time-to-revenue when cross-sold into existing digital customers.
- Innovation Studio is now embedded in nearly every net-new digital banking deal; management frames it as a distribution gateway for AI and partner solutions with a revenue-sharing model.
- Commercial banking scale strengthened: processed over $4 trillion in transaction volume in 2025, +21% YoY; December was first month >$400B.
- Management sees meaningful cross-sell runway: only ~10% of >$5B institutions have Q2’s full retail/commercial/relationship-pricing/fraud set; fraud penetration into digital-banking base estimated at 25%–30%.
- Non-subscription revenues (services, transactional) are expected to decline mid-single-digits going forward and are margin-dilutive, so continued mix shift to subscription is central to margin targets.
- Capital allocation is balanced: company resumed buybacks, remains open to M&A, and emphasizes reinvestment (R&D headcount increased; total employees 2,549).
Full Transcript
Kevin, Conference Operator: Good afternoon. My name is Kevin, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Q2 Holdings fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial results conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand. If you have dialed into today’s call, please press star 9 to raise your hand and star 6 to unmute when called upon. I will now hand the conference over to Josh Yankovich, Investor Relations. Sir, please begin.
Josh Yankovich, Investor Relations, Q2 Holdings: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and full year 2025 conference call. With me on the call today are Matt Flake, our CEO, and Jonathan Price, our CFO. This call contains forward-looking statements that are subject to significant risks and uncertainties, including, among other things, with respect to our expectations for the future operating and financial performance of Q2 Holdings and for the financial services industry. Actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements, and we can give no assurance that such expectations or any of our forward-looking statements will prove to be correct.
Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements are included in our periodic reports filed with the SEC, copies of which may be found on the Investor Relations section of our website, including our annual report on Form 10-K for the full year 2025 and the press release distributed this afternoon and filed in our Form 8-K with the SEC regarding the financial results we will discuss today. Forward-looking statements that we make on the call are based on assumptions only as of the date discussed. Investors should not assume that these statements will remain operative at a later time, and we undertake no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements discussed in this call. Also, unless otherwise stated, all financial measures discussed on this call other than revenue will be on a non-GAAP basis.
A discussion of why we use Non-GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of the Non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures is included in our press release, which is available on the Investor Relations section of our website and in our Form 8-K filed today with the SEC. We have also published additional materials related to today’s results on our Investor Relations website. Let me now turn the call over to Matt.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Josh, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. I’ll start by walking through our fourth quarter results and highlights, then step back and recap full year 2025 performance before sharing the key themes that define our strategy as we enter 2026. I’ll then hand the call over to Jonathan, who will cover our financial performance, provide guidance for 2026, and share our new financial framework. Starting with the fourth quarter, we delivered a strong finish to the year with performance that reflects solid execution across bookings, revenue, and profitability. In the fourth quarter, we generated strong year-over-year subscription revenue growth of 16%, expanded our Adjusted EBITDA margins by over 400 basis points year-over-year, and produced meaningful free cash flow of $56.6 million.
While Jonathan will walk through the numbers in more detail, the headline is that we closed the year with strong results across all of our key financial metrics. We had an outstanding quarter on the bookings front. The fourth quarter was our second-largest bookings quarter in company history and came directly on the heels of a record third quarter. This performance underscores both the strength of demand and our ability to execute, particularly in larger, more complex deals. As we said at the start of 2025, we expected our larger deals to be weighted toward the back half of the year, and that expectation continued to play out in the fourth quarter.
With 8 total Tier One and enterprise deals, notable wins included a Tier One institution that purchased both relationship pricing and commercial digital banking, a $40 billion digital banking customer that expanded its commercial and new fraud products, and a Helix deal with a top 5 credit union. Within our sales execution during the quarter, we continued to see a healthy balance of net new and expansion activity, which remains a defining characteristic of our bookings performance. Stepping back to the full year, 2025 was our strongest year as a company across bookings, revenue, and profitability. On the sales front, we executed well in a strong demand environment. We saw consistent activity up market throughout the year with a total of 26 enterprise and Tier One deals.
Expansion continued to play a critical role in our bookings profile, with half of those Tier One and enterprise deals coming from expansion with existing customers and the other half driven by new logos. Those wins came from across the product portfolio, and we feel good about the momentum in each of our major product areas. Our Digital Banking Platform provided a strong foundation for our booking success, contributing a diverse range of deals across banks and credit unions, large and small, retail and commercial, demonstrating the competitive strength of our platform approach. Relationship pricing delivered solid performance throughout the year, highlighted by strong net new execution in the Tier One space, the successful go-live of a top 5 bank, and long-term renewals with multiple top 10 U.S. bank customers. Risk and fraud remained one of our fastest-growing product lines in 2025 as well.
Financial institutions are increasingly prioritizing investment in fraud mitigation solutions, and as a result, our risk and fraud solutions consistently performed as standalone products helping new customers for Q2 and regularly showed up as our top cross-sold product as well. They also contributed meaningfully to our success up market throughout the year, including the largest fraud deal in company history with a $200 billion bank. Lastly, as bank M&A activity began to pick back up in 2025, it contributed positively to our business as institutions continued to overwhelmingly choose Q2 solutions post-transaction. Of the M&A deals involving a Q2 customer in 2025, 93% of them chose Q2 as a go-forward solution. We believe our experience in effectively executing post-acquisition technology conversions is a competitive advantage for us and one that helps our customers de-risk their transactions and realize value in their M&A deals.
Looking beyond sales and product success, 2025 was also a year which we successfully executed against our profitable growth strategy. Today, we’ll unveil a new financial outlook, which Jonathan will share shortly. With that in mind, I want to take a minute to share our product strategy and why we’re confident in our ability to execute against our long-term vision. At the core of our business is digital banking, where our single-platform approach continues to resonate. With a heightened focus on deposit growth and retention, our platform gives financial institutions the ability to streamline their technology environments while also providing best-in-class experiences that help them compete for, win, and retain critical relationships across retail, small business, and commercial customers. Within the single platform, our commercial banking solutions remain a particularly important growth driver.
We believe the maturity of our commercial solutions, combined with the usability of our modern interface, give us a durable competitive advantage. To demonstrate the scale of our commercial solutions, in 2025, we processed over $4 trillion in transaction volume, representing 21% year-over-year growth, with December being our first month ever to break $400 billion in transaction volume. As customers continue to invest in modernizing their commercial capabilities to support deposit growth, improve profitability, and compete more effectively up market, our scale and continued investment translated directly into both new wins and meaningful expansion opportunities. Rounding out the digital banking story, Innovation Studio has become a foundational component of our strategy. In 2025, nearly every net new digital banking deal included Innovation Studio, and we continue to see it deepen relationships with existing customers. It’s enabling faster product delivery, better economics, and stronger engagement.
As new priorities like AI emerge in financial services, we believe Innovation Studio puts Q2, our partners, and our customers in position to adapt swiftly, reinforcing Q2’s role at the center of innovation in the banking industry. Relationship pricing is another area where we continue to see strong demand. Customers are using these solutions across loans, deposits, and fee-based products to enhance profitability and improve consistency across their organizations. We believe this is a best-in-class solution in an area of growing demand, and it remains a key entry point into some of the largest financial institutions in the country. Lastly, as we look ahead to 2026, risk and fraud has emerged as one of the most strategically important areas in our portfolio. As financial institutions elevate their focus on fraud mitigation, fraud is no longer episodic or confined to a single channel.
It’s continuous, cross-channel, and embedded in nearly every digital interaction across retail, small business, and commercial banking. As a result, financial institutions are placing greater emphasis and greater investment on modernizing how they manage fraud. At the same time, the traditional approach of relying on fragmented point solutions is becoming increasingly complex and costly. While these tools can be effective in isolation, managing fraud across a growing number of channels and threats requires faster coordination, better visibility, and the ability to respond in real time, something that can be difficult to achieve with disconnected systems. We believe Q2 is uniquely well-positioned to meet this moment. Our standalone risk and fraud solutions continue to be strong land-and-expand products for the business, including with some of the largest enterprise and Tier One institutions.
Customers frequently adopt multiple fraud solutions over time, and fraud-led relationships often expand into broader partnerships across the Q2 portfolio. In addition, because of the central role our Digital Banking Platform plays in customers’ operations and data flows, we have earned access to the data, signals, and real-time contexts that are increasingly critical to fighting fraud more holistically. Looking into 2026, we believe this combination of proven standalone solutions and a platform-level approach position us well to capitalize on growing demand and help financial institutions address fraud more effectively. Before I hand it over to Jonathan, I want to spend a moment discussing our approach to AI, which we view as an important enabler of our long-term strategy for a few key reasons. First, we believe our single platform puts us in the best position of any financial institution partner to deliver meaningful AI innovation.
We occupy the center of our customers’ digital experiences in retail, small business, and commercial relationships. This allows us to deliver AI solutions that execute high-value banking operations for both bankers and end users across a wide range of use cases. Second, because of that privileged position, the data that powers our platform makes us the system of context for our customers. For financial institutions, the core processor serves as the transactional system of record. At Q2, however, we sit in the flow of every digital interaction and see every login, transaction, alert, message, and user decision, coveted data that gives us the real-time signals needed to understand what’s happening and what should happen next.
The most effective AI solutions rely on specific context to create value, and we believe that the rich data we generate in the platform gives us a tremendous amount of banking-specific context that can be additive to value generation and differentiated from other solutions. Finally, after many conversations with customers over the past few years, we firmly believe that our regional and community financial institutions will depend on us as a trusted partner as they go on this journey with AI. Because of our strategic role and experience in supporting digital innovation for our customers, we believe it’s our duty to help our customers navigate AI, just like we did with internet banking, mobile, and cloud. Our customer-based and established ecosystem model opens a valuable distribution channel to other AI innovators looking to serve this market efficiently.
The combination of these factors is why we believe AI innovation within financial services will flow through Q2, not around us. We believe we are well-positioned to translate that into tangible outcomes for our business over time. We intend to continue to use AI to enhance existing products and build new ones more efficiently, unlocking new bookings and revenue potential over the long term. We’ve also identified several important areas where we can help deliver value with AI to our customers, including fraud, personalization, back office, banker-facing operations, and tasks across the Q2 portfolio. We have several products across these areas that are live or in early adopter stage today. Over time, we believe our product innovation can create monetization opportunities that we will continue to evaluate as part of our long-term operating model.
Next, we believe that in the near future, embedded AI capabilities will become integral to delivering digital banking. This is where we believe our platform approach and our deep integration set give us a competitive advantage. And today, we are building platform-level AI innovation like AI-assisted coding capabilities for developers on our platform and AI-enhanced Q2 support tools to even further improve the customer experience. Lastly, we believe AI will play a meaningful role in providing operating efficiency back to our business over the long term. We’re already using AI to improve how Q2 operates across core functions like support, delivery, and engineering, improving efficiency and scalability that we believe can support long-term margin expansion while making our teams faster, more skilled, and more productive. Let me now shift to what we’re seeing in our pipeline as we head into 2026.
We exited 2025 with a very strong back half bookings performance. At a macro level, fundamentals of our end market remain solid with improving credit quality, stable margins, and re-accelerating M&A activity, all supporting a constructive demand environment as we enter 2026. From a pipeline perspective, we continue to see healthy pipeline activity across both net new and expansion opportunities, with particular strength in larger deals where our platform approach and product portfolio differentiate us. As was the case last year, we do expect Tier One and enterprise activity to be weighted toward the back half of the year. Overall, we feel great about our momentum and pipeline, and we’re confident in our ability to continue executing in 2026 and beyond. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Jonathan to walk through our updated guidance and long-term outlook.
Josh Yankovich, Investor Relations, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Matt. We’re pleased to announce fourth quarter and full year results that outperformed the high end of our guidance as we delivered strong results across several metrics which demonstrated continued execution of our profitable growth strategy. We saw growth in our subscription-based revenues, advanced our operational efficiency, and exceeded our free cash flow conversion target of at least 90%, enabling us to improve capital allocation. We believe our record backlog and solid subscription ARR growth positions us well for continued success in 2026 and beyond. With that, let me start by discussing our financial results in more detail, and I’ll finish with our 2026 guidance as well as our longer-term financial framework. Total revenue for the fourth quarter was $208.2 million, an increase of 14% year-over-year and 3% sequentially, driven by subscription-based revenues resulting largely from the delivery of new customer go-lives and expansions with existing customers.
Total revenue for the full year was $794.8 million, up 14% from the prior year, representing our highest annual growth rate since 2021. Subscription revenue growth for the full year was 17% and represented 82% of total revenue. Based on the strength in subscription-based bookings we observed throughout 2025, we expect a mix of this high-margin revenue stream to continue increasing as the percentage of our overall revenue mix in 2026. Total non-subscription revenues increased by 2% for the full year in 2025, partially driven by an increase in services revenue, which benefited from an easier comparison versus the prior year, as well as higher professional services revenues primarily driven by M&A-related core conversions. Total annualized recurring revenue, or total ARR, grew to $921 million, up 12% year-over-year from $824 million at the end of the fourth quarter of 2024.
Our subscription ARR grew to $780 million, up 14% from $682 million in the prior year period. Our year-over-year subscription ARR growth was largely driven by bookings from new customer wins as well as expansions with existing customers. Our total ARR growth remains below subscription ARR growth, driven by the recent trends we’ve discussed in non-subscription-based revenue over the last few years. Our ending backlog of $2.7 billion increased by $175 million sequentially, or 7%, and $472 million year-over-year, representing 21% growth. The year-over-year and sequential increases were supported by bookings success across new, expansion, and renewal activity. While we continue to see ample opportunity ahead, as we have mentioned previously, the sequential change in backlog may fluctuate quarter-to-quarter based on the number of renewal opportunities available within that quarter.
Our trailing 12-month total net revenue retention rate for 2025 was 113%, up from 109% in 2024. When looking at only subscription-based revenues, our subscription net revenue retention rate ended the year at approximately 115% compared to 114% in 2024. Our revenue churn for 2025 was 5.2% compared to 4.4% in 2024, reflecting an increase in overall M&A activity year-over-year. As a reminder, heading into the year, we expected a higher level of M&A activity relative to prior years. As Matt mentioned, we continue to be selected as the go-forward solution in the vast majority of M&A transactions within our customer base. While this activity can influence churn trends in a given period, M&A has consistently been a net positive as we have largely retained and expanded our relationships as a result of those transactions.
Gross margins were 58.6% for the fourth quarter, up from 57.4% in the prior year period and 57.9% in the previous quarter. Both the year-over-year and sequential increase in gross margin were driven by an increasing mix of higher-margin subscription-based revenue. Gross margins were 58% for the full year, up from 56% in the prior year, representing approximately 200 basis points of improvement. This margin expansion was driven by an increasing portion of subscription revenue in our overall mix, coupled with enhanced operational efficiencies from our global workforce, and partially offset by increased costs related to our cloud migration, which we completed in January 2026. Total operating expenses for the fourth quarter were $78.9 million, or 37.9% of revenue, compared to $75.4 million, or 41.2% of revenue in the fourth quarter of 2024, and $76.1 million, or 37.7% of revenue in the previous quarter.
The year-over-year improvement in operating expenses as a percent of revenue was largely derived from continued scaling across G&A and sales and marketing, while the modest sequential increase was driven by higher research and development costs as we continued to invest across the areas Matt discussed earlier. Full year operating expenses of $306.7 million represented 38.6% of revenue in 2025, down from 42.3% of revenue in the prior year period. The improvement in operating expenses as a percent of revenue for the full year was driven by higher revenues and a focus on operational efficiency, primarily manifested within G&A and sales and marketing. We ended the year with 2,549 total employees, up from 2,476 at the end of 2024, with the majority of additional resources onboarded within R&D.
Total adjusted EBITDA was a record $51.2 million in the fourth quarter, up 36% from $37.6 million in the prior year period and up 5% from $48.8 million in the previous quarter. Full year adjusted EBITDA was $186.5 million, up 49% from $125.3 million in the prior year, with adjusted EBITDA margins up by approximately 550 basis points as we continue to mix towards higher-margin revenue streams and drive operational efficiencies across the business. We ended the quarter with cash, cash equivalents, and investments of $433 million, down from $569 million at the end of the previous quarter, driven by the retirement of $191 million of 2025 convertible notes that matured in November, as well as the repurchase of $5 million of our stock in the open market.
We generated cash flow from operations of $64 million in the fourth quarter, driven by new bookings, larger annual invoices, and seasonal strength in working capital. We also generated Free Cash Flow of $57 million in the quarter, resulting in Free Cash Flow for the year of $173 million, representing a 93% Free Cash Flow conversion rate as a percentage of Adjusted EBITDA. This better-than-expected conversion rate was attributable to increased focus on profitability across the business, streamlined operational processes, and effective working capital management. Let me finish by sharing our first quarter and full year 2026 guidance. We forecast first quarter revenue in the range of $212.5 million-$216.5 million and full year revenue in the range of $871 million-$878 million, representing year-over-year growth of approximately 10% for the full year.
We previously communicated the expectation for full year 2026 subscription revenue growth of approximately 13.5%, and we are now raising that outlook to at least 14%. We forecast first quarter adjusted EBITDA in the range of $52.5 million-$55.5 million and full year 2026 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $225 million-$230 million, representing approximately 26% of revenue for the full year. We are now in the final year of the three-year framework we introduced in February of 2024, and we have meaningfully outperformed those initial goals. Those targets called for average subscription revenue growth of approximately 14%, average annual adjusted EBITDA margin expansion of 300-400 basis points, and free cash flow conversion greater than 70% of adjusted EBITDA.
For that three-year period, we are now expecting average subscription revenue growth of approximately 16%, average annual Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion of at least 450 basis points, and free cash flow conversion continuing to exceed 90%. This represents meaningful outperformance relative to our initial three-year framework and reflects the consistency of our execution, the strength of our business model, and the discipline of our team. As we enter the final year of our previous framework, we are taking the opportunity to provide additional clarity on how we think about the business beyond 2026. This includes both our initial expectations for 2027 and a longer-term financial framework that reflects the operating leverage of our business model. Starting with initial expectations for full year 2027, we are targeting annual subscription revenue growth between 12.5%-13% and Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion between 150 and 200 basis points.
We are also introducing longer-term profitability targets of where we expect the business to operate over approximately the next five years. By the end of 2030, we believe the business will achieve non-GAAP gross margins of at least 65% and Adjusted EBITDA margins of at least 35%. These are not near-term objectives, nor will we necessarily have a linear progression over this time period, but these targets reflect our longer-term expectations as operating leverage continues to build in the business. In summary, we delivered strong results in 2025, finishing the year ahead of expectations and above the high end of our guidance, while also driving meaningful expansion in profitability and cash flow conversion. As we enter 2026, we’re raising our subscription revenue outlook for the year and providing a clearer view into how we believe the business can perform as it scales.
We intend to continue to execute on our profitable growth strategy by balancing investments to sustain durable subscription revenue growth and drive operating leverage over time while prioritizing effective capital allocation. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Matt for his closing remarks. Thanks, Jonathan. I’ll close by stepping back and putting the year into perspective. 2025 was a defining year for Q2. We’ve delivered strong execution across bookings, revenue, and profitability. We’re seeing demand across our major product lines, digital banking, relationship pricing, and risk and fraud, and we’re seeing that demand show up in larger deals with both new and existing customers. Expansion continues to be a defining characteristic of our business, and our customers are choosing to deepen their partnerships with Q2 because our platform is delivering real value across their most critical priorities.
As we move into 2026, we do so with a strong pipeline, a clear strategy for profitable growth, and a platform that we believe positions us at the center of the next phase of innovation and banking, whether it be deposit growth, fraud management, or AI, we’re confident in our ability to continue executing, investing thoughtfully, and delivering value for our customers and our shareholders. With that, operator, let’s open the call up for questions.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: We will now begin the question and answer session. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. A reminder that if you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand now. If you have dialed into today’s call, please press star 9 to raise your hand and star 6 to unmute. Please stand by as we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Alex Sklar of Raymond James. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: Great. Thank you. Matt, first one for you. Just with some of the growing expectations around core modernization within your FI base over the next several years, can you just talk about what you typically see in terms of demand for your own solutions when an FI decides to migrate its core to the cloud or switch core vendors? How often does that create an opportunity for you and any change in terms of what you’re seeing there in the pipeline related to those opportunities?
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. Thanks, Alex. Anytime a bank or credit union has decided to make a change to their technology, whether it’s in the core area in particular, it opens up an opportunity for us, and we are expecting to get some opportunities from that. I consider it found money. I haven’t had it I don’t have it built into the numbers this year, but I think we’re well positioned to get a lot of at-bats for those that happen. I don’t know the timing on those, and there’s some natural conversions that happen every year. But as you know, there’s some cores some of the core providers are forcing conversions, so it should create some opportunity. It’s just hard to quantify it, but I like how we’re positioned, and I think it should create opportunities for us.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: All right. Great. And then, Jonathan, maybe one for you. I appreciate the early view into already giving a little bit of an above-2027 subscription growth outlook. Can you help us understand the right way to think about your underlying visibility into that subscription growth? Is it just on the strength and the strong Q4 bookings? Is anything embedded in terms of what you need to go get still in 2026? And maybe where could there still be areas of upside to that early outlook?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. Thanks, Alex. No, we feel good about the early look into 2027 and the range we provided. I think you should definitely look to the first half of 2026 bookings execution as having an impact potentially on 2027 that could drive upside to that. But we feel good about what we’re putting out there based on the strength of not just the fourth quarter, but all of 2025. When you look at the mix of deals in the year, especially in the back half, Matt talked about just how much we skew towards larger deals in the back half. And because of the time to revenue on those larger deals, the full brunt of those that will hit revenue really give us visibility into 2027 from that perspective.
So we’re very comfortable with the range we provided, and I would just look to, once you get to the back half of 2026, the likelihood of it having a big impact in 2027 is smaller. So it’s really our first half bookings execution that could theoretically drive upside to that range.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: All right. Great. Thank you both.
Josh Yankovich, Investor Relations, Q2 Holdings0: Thanks, Alex.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Alex.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Your next question comes from Ella Smith of J.P. Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Ella Smith, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Good evening. Thank you for taking my question. First for Matt, you cited very good traction with cross-sell in the quarter, particularly FraudTech. Can you please update us on the latest metrics as to how much room there is to still expand within your existing customer base for all the auxiliary products you sell outside digital banking?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. Well, I can take that. I mean, one of the ways I would quantify it is if you just look at our Tier One customer base, so every financial institution above $5 billion, only 10% of them have all three of our retail, commercial, and relationship pricing and fraud solutions. If you look at just the fraud opportunity, it’s a little tricky because we have so many fraud solutions that are in the hands of clients standalone, meaning they are just on fraud products, and we can use that opportunity to cross-sell into digital.
But if you look at the digital banking customer base and say, "How much opportunity could we sell fraud products into that base?" we still think there’s a huge opportunity, maybe to the tune of 25%-30% penetrated in totality, but there is a significant penetration opportunity when you think about not just the Q2 set of products, but also the Innovation Studio partner ecosystem in the FraudTech space. So it’s very early days from our standpoint when we think about the opportunity to monetize fraud products within the digital banking customer base.
Ella Smith, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Great. Thank you. Very clear. And for a follow-up, given the strength of your Free Cash Flow conversion, how do you weigh using your cash for share repurchases versus M&A versus anything else?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. Well, what I’d say there is the performance on the free cash flow generation side kind of gives us the flexibility to be thoughtful around what is the right answer at any point in time. You heard that in the fourth quarter, we started the repurchase activity associated with the authorization that we called out on the last earnings call. And you can assume with where the share price has been that we’ve continued down that path throughout January and the first part of February here. But that doesn’t preclude us from the other capital allocation alternatives that are out there. Our cash balance, I think, gives us the freedom to still explore M&A actively.
But the other thing I’ll point to is as you look at the operating leverage in the business implied in our 2026 and 2027 outlook, you can see less expansion than what we’ve shown in 2023, 2024, and 2025 in the next two years. And a big chunk of that is reinvesting into areas like R&D that are going to drive an elongated growth trajectory for the business. So we are very focused on balancing that idea of generating more Free Cash Flow, but also reinvesting it prudently into the business to drive long-term growth.
Ella Smith, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Great. Thanks so much.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Ella.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Your next question comes from Terry Tillman of Truist. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: Yeah. Hopefully, you can hear me okay. And congratulations on the fourth quarter strong bookings finish. The first question’s going to be double-clicking in just digital banking holistically. I’m curious, if we take a step back, where do you think we are in terms of baseball analogy on innings in terms of just dynamism and kind of replacement opportunities for retail, small business, and then commercial? And then I had a follow-up for Jonathan.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah, Terry. I think if you think about the vast majority of banks and credit unions are using legacy core processor systems for digital banking, which in some cases are in desperate need of an upgrade. We just seem to operate at a pace different than they do. They’re great companies. They’ll be around for a long time. The demand environment kind of tells you that we’re differentiated in this for retail, small business, and corporate. With a single platform, Jonathan talked about the expansion opportunities, which you have seen for the last probably eight quarters. Whether it’s an existing customer where we can go sell retail, small business, commercial, or even relationship pricing, or a net new customer, the customers, our customers are doing very well. If you look at it, the stocks are up. They’re operating in this environment pretty well.
They got through the 2022, 2023 period of time. They are focused on what we’ve been talking about all the time: deposit acquisition, retention, and growth. They’re looking for operating efficiencies. They’re looking for ways to generate revenue, which comes from commercial deposits largely. I just think there is a significant amount of runway for us. If I look at the pipeline, the ASPs, our win rates, it lays out really well for a great 2026 and hopefully 2027. I don’t know what inning that is. Let’s just say the beginning of the fourth.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: Okay. All right. Fine. That’s a good answer there. I appreciate that. I guess for Jonathan, risk and fraud, could you remind us again? I’m sure you have an aggressive pipeline for 2026, but I’m just curious, how quickly is that a go win it and be able to implement it and start recognizing revenue? Is that a faster time-to-revenue type product? And said another way, is that potentially kind of a meaningful swing factor if you do upside your sub-revenue? It would become from risk and fraud, and those products go in faster. Thank you.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Terry. I mean, I hate to say it really depends, but it does from the standpoint of are you selling it standalone to a customer, in which case we can typically see implementation timelines that are faster than traditional digital banking. But if it’s in the context of a digital banking net new, often it will follow the timeline of the go live on digital. For an existing customer that’s already live on digital, though, that’s where you can see faster time-to-revenue because if we’re cross-selling a centric solution or an Innovation Studio partner on the fraud and risk side, that’s where you can see much, much faster time-to-revenue outcomes.
It’s a little bit of both, but in general, I would say that the timelines for going live on the fraud side are going to be faster outside of the very large net new deals that are associated with the digital banking implementation.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: Thank you.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Terry.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Terry.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Your next question comes from Andrew Schmidt of KeyBank. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Andrew Schmidt, Analyst, KeyBank: Hey, Matt. Hey, Jonathan. Good results here. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to start off just on the commercial side. Clearly, the solution has been resonating very well in market. No surprise since the commercial side has gotten more competitive with FIs. And I think you’re hitting that pretty well. Maybe talk about just how demand has evolved for the last couple of years and the demand into 2026 is trending on the commercial side. And then maybe just an overarching question on just overall pipeline and composition would be helpful. I know you mentioned that, prepared remarks, but if we could drill down on that, that’d be super helpful. Thanks so much.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. The real driver for the demand was the change in rates and the access to deposits and the importance of deposits. And as I’ve said many times, commercial deposits are the stickiest, the largest, and the most profitable because they’re able to charge for services around that, whether it’s wires, ACH, information reporting. And so you’re seeing a significant amount of demand for these products so that they can go get those commercial accounts and the operating accounts on the customers that they have lines of credit with. And so that demand environment, as long as rates are going to be in the vicinity, I don’t think we’re ever going to get back, or not in my lifetime, back to the zero rate or 1% rate. I think that demand’s going to continue because that’s the lifeblood of these businesses. They’ve got to have the deposits.
I feel very good about that opportunity for us as we move forward. As far as the shape of the pipeline, I think it’ll be similar to last year. I think you’ll see larger deals kind of come through in the second half of the year. We do have some nice deals in the first half. I think you’ll see more out of Precision Lender in the first half and more fraud in the first half just because of the momentum we have there. But we’ve got a really healthy digital banking pipeline with some significant tier twos and tier threes and a couple of tier ones that are working for the first half. I feel very good about the pipe for the first half. You’re closer to it, and so you can see it.
Then the coverage ratios for the back half of the year are really good as well. Coming off a really strong third quarter and the second-best quarter in the history of the company to feel that way, we feel really blessed.
Andrew Schmidt, Analyst, KeyBank: Yeah. No, it all sounds great. Thank you, Matt. And then maybe you could just ask on the 2030 targets, the margin targets, understanding those are longer-term in nature and they could fluctuate between now and then. But maybe just talk about some of the assumptions that go into that. Is there tech monetization in there? Is it just scale, cost optimization? Just if you could unpack that a little bit, that’d be helpful. Thanks so much.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. Thanks, Andrew. It’s really a combination of all the things you mentioned, as well as the continued mix shift on the subscription side. So in 2025, full year 2025 subscription revenue mix was 82%. As you get out to 2030, I’d expect that to continue to mix up into the mid-’80s, if not higher. So that’s going to be a contributor. From a cost of sales perspective, we see efficiency opportunities throughout those line items. And we’re still optimizing from a global offshoring perspective. We’re later stage in that one, but there’s still some execution there that will drive opportunity over the next five years. And then as we think about the OPEX opportunities, sales and marketing and G&A are going to be the biggest areas of leverage as you look out to 2030.
R&D, while maybe not as much, you can see that in the 2026 and 2027 numbers specifically. By the time you get out to 2030, we expect there will be efficiency that’s driven from that line item as well.
Andrew Schmidt, Analyst, KeyBank: Super helpful. Thanks, Jonathan.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Andrew.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Your next question comes from Matt Vanvliet of Canaccord Genuity. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess as we look at AI, you mentioned a number of opportunities. So one, obviously, the efficiencies internally are seemingly already showing up. But maybe as we think about Innovation Studio and some of the other monetization efforts, how are you guys thinking about that between having very discrete sort of charges to use that? How does that mix in? And then what is the sort of counter to that of just saying, "Here’s more value of the platform that should help us win customers," and maybe more slowly monetizing it over time, understanding that maybe some of these processes aren’t the most compute-intensive like we might see in other areas?
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah, Matt. The beauty of the Innovation Studio is we have a revenue-sharing model already in place. We firmly believe we’re the gateway for these AI products and features that could be coming to us, and our customers are asking us to help with AI, and how are we going to work together to do that? Then what’s interesting is a lot of the companies that go to these banks directly, the banks are steering them to us. So it just reiterates the point that we think there’s an opportunity to partner with people to build our own products. We are well down the path of building AI products, using AI to help us become more efficient, helping our customers use AI products to become more efficient.
It really sets up well for us with the overhang on our customers in a highly regulated environment, security, compliance, and the integrations and the trust we’ve built with these customers over the last 20+ years puts us in a great position to capitalize on it. We are very excited about it.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: And then I guess as we look towards the framework you outlined, so maybe this is for Jonathan, but I guess how much of the yet-to-be-released, sort of in-process R&D components are you including in some of that? Or should we think about some of the moving pieces, potentially adding additional top-line growth that could materialize and maybe give you some upside or at least some cushion in the targets you laid out?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah, I would say they would be upside to the targets. I think we have conviction in this model and this framework in the paradigm we’re operating in today. Not to say that from an efficiency standpoint, we’re not already seeing and expect to see more benefits through that 2030 time period. But if you’re talking about specific monetization opportunities and the benefits from what Matt talked about, that would be upside to this framework.
Alex Sklar, Analyst, Raymond James: All right. Great. Thank you.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Matt.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Matt.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: And your next question comes from Parker Lane of Stifel. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Matthew Kickert, Analyst, Stifel: Hi. This is Matthew Kickert from Stifel. Thank you for taking my questions. To start, what is your view on kind of the banking M&A landscape right now, and what impact does that have on your 2026 guidance compared to historical trends?
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Well, clearly, it’s picking up. And as we said in the prepared remarks, and we’ve said historically, last year, we were 93% of the time. We were the surviving entity. We tend to have customers that are inclined to acquire other banks to grow. If you look at the number of customers we have, over $5 billion, I think it’s up to 200 now, 50% of the top 100. So we feel very well positioned in the M&A environment. And Jonathan, do you want to talk about and I think it’s going to continue, obviously. And Jonathan, do you want to talk about the in the plan?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. And what we know in terms of deals that have been announced and where we have either booked a contract with regards to an M&A deal that’s now closed or we have visibility into it, that would be captured. What we don’t do is model hypothetical M&A that may be coming or that we don’t know about as some sort of plug into the forecast, where, again, in most of these cases, that would lead to upside. And to the extent in the 5%-7% of time, historically, it has not gone in our favor, typically, that takes some time to roll off, including potentially being mitigated by buyouts. So we feel good about it. I think we have a lot of conviction in the 2026 guide we’re giving. And most of the time, we would expect there to be upside from the M&A outcome.
If there’s anything that happened the other way, we think we could absorb it within the context of that framework anyway.
Matthew Kickert, Analyst, Stifel: Okay. Thank you. And then my second question.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Sorry. Go ahead.
Matthew Kickert, Analyst, Stifel: My second question is on internal AI efficiencies. I’m just wondering kind of what you’re working on there and how does that play into the EBITDA expansion target for 2026?
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. As we talked about in the November call, we structured the business in a way to where we could maximize our engineering team working with our hosting team, our support team, and our delivery teams to make sure we’re using all the AI tools that are available. Our go-to-market team is using AI tools. HR, finance, accounting, every single department of this company are using AI tools to drive efficiencies in their business. And how we layered in, we’re going to be cautious with that because there’s an expense to get all these tools, and then it takes a little time to do that. But we are seeing some early signs of some real positive outcomes.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. What I would just add to that is, as you think about the 2026 and 2027 margin expansion commentary we provided and the ranges we gave, we have conviction in those regardless of AI efficiency. And we do already see some early returns that are coming from internal use cases with AI. As you look out beyond 2027 and the path to that 35% target, I think that’s where you can assume that AI efficiencies will have a meaningful impact. But again, we feel confident in the ability to hit those numbers no matter how it plays out. But the early returns are strong enough that we certainly think by the third through fifth year of that framework, we’re going to be seeing some meaningful leverage when it comes to AI across this company.
Matthew Kickert, Analyst, Stifel: Okay. Thank you.
Josh Yankovich, Investor Relations, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Matthew.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thank you.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Your next question comes from James Fawcett of Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please go ahead. A reminder that it is star six to unmute.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: Hey, guys. It’s Mike Lanzante. Any interesting trends in the actual tech spend of your customers and how they’re reallocating dollars right now? In particular, I’m curious if you’re seeing vendor consolidation to fund AI-related spend and if that would represent a sustained tailwind to more platform consolidation RFPs that would combine digital with fraud, commercial, etc. Thanks.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. I haven’t seen it for AI purposes, but if you go back to 2022 and 2023, when rates went up so rapidly, you began to see vendor consolidation occur. And the vendor consolidation was the back-office providers and then front-office providers. And we were obviously a net beneficiary of that if you look at bookings from the back half of 2023 through 2025. So I think that that is where they started to drive the efficiencies to be able to spend more on digital experiences as opposed to kind of run the bank stuff. We consider ourselves changed the bank. And I think that trend will continue. And I think AI will be a tailwind to that as well, that we’re certainly in a position to capitalize on in talking with our customers.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: That’s helpful, Matt. And then maybe just on your agentic strategy broadly, what’s the push and pull right now from customers? Do they want you to? Do they want agents to sort of operate within a Q2 governed framework? And if so, do you think that could represent a tailwind to Innovation Studio just given its ability to sort of stitch together a variety of different point solutions? Thanks, guys.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. I think you have to remember these are probably the most conservative group of business people in the country. Compliance is where they start. The regulatory environment is obviously something that they start with when they start looking at technology solutions. So as I said earlier, all of our customers that we’ve talked with are coming to us and asking about how they should think about it. We’re still teaching them about agentic AI and the opportunities and how we can get ahead of other people by building these solutions with our customers and talking to them about how it works.
And so that’s why one of the reasons we talked about the system of context in that we have data that we think is really important: transaction flows, user behavior signals, integrations, real-time decision-making, and allows you to not only know what they just did but what they may do next, which is really where agentic comes into play. So we think there’s a lot of opportunity there, and we’re working with our customers. But we’ve tried some things, and some have worked and some haven’t. But we think that’s going to be a pretty big tailwind for us as we get deeper with our customers.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: Thanks, Matt.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Michael.
Your next question comes from Charles Naben of Stephens. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Charles Naben, Analyst, Stephens: Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my question. I know it’s becoming a smaller piece of the revenue pie, but can you talk about the outlook for non-subscription revenue? Given that it’s diluted to margins, the degree to which any recovery is assumed in the 2027 or longer-term framework?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. So from a non-subscription standpoint, sort of commented on this briefly in the prepared remarks, despite the strength we saw in 2025, in totality, we expect the combined services and transactional line items to decline in both years, as far as we can see for the foreseeable future, in the mid-single-digit range. So you’re right. Those are margin-dilutive line items, but we also don’t expect a recovery based on what we see. And the big drivers to that are really continued weakness when it comes to discretionary spending on services engagements as well as legacy bill pay. Those continue to be the drivers. And the upswing we saw in 2025 was really driven by a significant pickup from a really low base in M&A core conversions. And while we expect that to remain high, we don’t expect that to grow off of the elevated levels of 2025.
So you really don’t see the opportunity to grow those line items to the extent we did in 2025 as we look forward. So did that answer your question, Chuck? In general, we expect the profile to be in mid-single-digit degradation in those line items. And they are margin-dilutive, but they’re also shrinking in scale.
Charles Naben, Analyst, Stephens: Got it. That’s super helpful. As a follow-up, and apologies if I missed this, but could you give us an update on the Innovation Studio from the standpoint of your monetization effort, how big it could become potentially as a revenue contributor, as well as the role it plays in your overall AI initiatives?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. I mean, it’s become a core part of what we are calling our platform from a digital banking perspective. When you think about the revenue model of that business where we’re getting net revenue from our clients, and so the margin profile is very high, the adoption of both our FIs and their adoption of these products is increasing. 2025 was a very big year in uptick on all of our internal KPI indicators. And then to your point, in an AI-first world, we just see that the value of our data and our distribution are something that’s the best technologies, whether it’s existing products that develop an AI-driven value proposition that modernizes their offering or a new AI-first product that wants to enter financial services that, as Matt said, we are the gateway to do it.
Without the scale and security and maturity of the Innovation Studio, I don’t think we’d be in nearly as good a position to capitalize on this opportunity. We feel strategically, this is a huge opportunity for this business and continue to see it as a revenue contributor, a margin contributor, and a key element of both winning net new deals and retaining our existing customers and being that path to capturing AI opportunities and financial services that we don’t necessarily build.
Charles Naben, Analyst, Stephens: Got it. Appreciate all that color. Thank you.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Chuck.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Chuck, sure.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Your next question comes from Matthew Inglis of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: Hey there. This is Matthew Inglis on for Dan Perlin at RBC. I was wondering if you guys could update us on the cadence and magnitude of the cost savings in 2026 as you exit data centers as part of the completion of the cloud migration.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah, definitely. So you sort of see it in our framework when you look at our 2026 guide. We have included in that framework for 2026 gross margin expectation of north of 60%. And so when you look at it, whether you look at the fourth quarter of 2025 or the full year of 2025, we are expecting a significant step up in that gross margin metric. And then as you think about now sitting here in mid-February, complete from a cloud migration standpoint when it comes to customer migrations and fully complete, certainly, in all facets as we exit Q1, if not sooner, we’re in a great position to capitalize from seeing all of those data center-related costs roll off the P&L. And so that’s really the biggest driver of that step up in the 2026 gross margin guidance that you’re seeing.
Then as you see that evolve to the target we put out for 2030, it’s some of the levers I talked about earlier. One of them includes, once we’ve had a chance to operate in the cloud environment, there are opportunities to optimize elasticity and cost for the new environment. It probably just takes us a little bit of time in the cloud, in the AWS, to understand how to do that with conviction and safety for our customers. But as we get into 2027 and beyond, we think there’s another step function opportunity from a gross margin perspective within that cloud spend bucket.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: That sounds great. Thanks, guys.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Thank you.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Matthew.
Your next question comes from Chris Kennedy of William Blair. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question. There’s been a lot of changes in the regulatory environment. Can you just give us an update on Helix and kind of the prospects for that business going forward?
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. I mean, I think from a regulatory perspective, I wouldn’t say there’s anything in the last three months that has changed our outlook for the Helix business. I think we are continuing to see opportunities. We talked about one in the quarter, a very large credit union that chose Helix for one of their strategic product offerings. And we continue to see banks and credit unions exploring what we call fabric or core modernization opportunities that are really about bringing together a retail strategy that makes more economic sense relative to the legacy infrastructure that’s out there for a certain cohort of their customers. That continues to be the big opportunity for Helix going forward.
From an existing customer perspective, we’ve executed well in renewing our large existing client base, and especially the ones that drive the majority of the revenue in that business. And then we feel good about the way that those businesses are investing and making their programs more profitable. And we’re seeing the benefit of that. So no real change, clearly not the demand environment that we saw back in 2020 through 2022, but nothing in the last three months that’s pivoted our outlook on the Helix business at large.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: Great. Thanks for that. And then just we noticed the 50 SMB customers on the Digital Banking Platform. Can you just talk about kind of the opportunity to expand that metric? Thank you.
Jonathan Price, CFO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. I mean, when we think about SMB and commercial still, and you think about the total of about 500 digital banking customers, that’s a huge area of opportunity. I mean, we think that SMB is an area of focus for a lot of these institutions and in some ways a gateway to larger commercial. So we feel really good about that. And as Matt talked about, the demand for commercial is extraordinarily high. And we think our positioning and our differentiation on the commercial side is helping us win a lot in the market. So I don’t know if there’s anything you’d add.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Yeah. I mean, as the bigger banks get bigger, they kind of abandon businesses that are $25-$50 million in revenue. And these customers need to expand their offering to go get a larger customer for the operating accounts. And that drives more revenue for us through utilization. So it’s another tailwind for us.
Michael Lanzante/Matthew Inglis, Analyst, Morgan Stanley/RBC Capital Markets: Got it. Thank you, guys. Appreciate it.
Matt Flake, CEO, Q2 Holdings: Thanks, Chris. Appreciate it.
There are no further questions at this time. This concludes today’s call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.